In case you missed the news, AMD’s next foray into the HPC and server market will be Epyc 2, known as Rome. It is an up to 64 core (128 thread) monster, built on the companies 7nm Zen 2 architecture which will debut next year. Unlike the Zen+ architecture found in both the companies.

Now is a pretty great time to pick up computer hardware. RAM and SSD prices have finally started to fall, AMD and Intel have released their various flagship processors, and we now can see what all the fuss is about with the RTX 20 series from Nvidia. Combine that with some fantastic deals floating around.

You may have seen the rather concerning reports circling the interwebs that the Nvidia RTX 2080Ti – the flagship Turing GPU – had been delisted. But, have no fear, as Nvidia have officially put those reports to bed. But, really, even the most lazy private investigator could have figured this out. As I point.

For many users, there’s more to a graphics card than its ability to push the frame rates in the latest games; there’s also professional workloads to take into consideration too. If you’re a gamer, it might be tempting to nab a cheap Pascal card (and even then, Turing is faster, and with Pascal missing.

AMD put on quite the show with their recent Next Horizon conference, but they’re not content to rest on their laurels just yet. They have just announced a new addition to the EPYC 7000 series lineup, and it just show happens that this is their highest clock part to date. The reveal of the.

With Zen 2 arriving next year with not only the Epyc second generation Rome, but also the desktop mainstream and HEDT with Ryzen 3000 and Threadripper 3000 respectively, there’s a lot of news floating about regarding the IPC gains of the next generation AMD architecture. AMD confirmed at best we’ll see up to a 29%.

The first details of the Ryzen 7 3700U APU have leaked online thanks to two different benchmarks and we have several hints (and a lot of questions) of what we can expect from the final retail release of the Ryzen 3000 series APUs. The engineering sample processor sports a 3.8GHZ boost clock with a.

There was a lot of expectation heading into AMD’s Next Horizon event – we knew it was unlikely they’d spend much time on gaming, with a possible mention of the Radeon RX 590 being about the most we would hope for. But now the event is over, it’s clear why the company opted to.

AMD’s Next Horizon event will be tomorrow, and the company are almost certainly going to show off several important new technologies and products. The Radeon RX 590 will serve to bump up the performance of team red’s mid range GPU offerings, and in theory provide just enough performance to get ahead of Nvidia’s GeForce.

AMD are preparing to launch a second refresh of the Polaris line of graphics card, the Radeon RX 590 graphics card. The Radeon RX 590 will sport higher clock speeds compared to the Radeon RX 590, but the underlying architecture is identical other than the shift to 12nm. The Radeon RX 590 runs at.

Questions concerning upgrades are by far some of the most common emails and messages we receive here at RGT, and a good portion of those questions revolve around bottlenecks. Will a specific component hold back a shiny new upgrade that the user is planning to plonk into their PC. In the case of a.

While I wouldn’t say that stagnant is the right word for the graphics card markets prior to the reveal of the RTX 20 series and 7nm Vega graphics cards, we did see the status quo of Polaris vs Pascal for quite some time. Technically, only Nvidia have revealed something new, as AMD have made.

The launch of the 9th generation Coffee Lake refresh CPUs nears ever closer to release, we have seen a fair few benchmarks and performance numbers surface online. A lot of these have understandably been surrounding the flagship i9 9900K, but today we have a benchmark leak for the 8 core Intel i7 9700K processor..

There’s been a lot of speculation as to the performance levels of Nvidia’s Turing architecture, which is the follow on to both Pascal and Volta. The elevator pitch for GeForce Turing would be to imagine Volta, and tweak it for gaming, keeping the improvements in architecture such as Cache in place. Naturally, this is.

During Gamescom, Nvidia announced 3 distinct GeForce SKUs all based on the new Turing architecture, the top of the line card being the RTX 2080 Ti, followed by the RTX 2080 and finally the RTX 2070 GPU. Given it’s been over two years since the company released Pascal, hype has been pretty unreal; particularly.

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